Title: LIFE OF PI by Yann Martel
1LIFE OF PIby Yann Martel
2PIS INCREDULOUS SURVIVAL
- Discuss the factors that contribute to Pis
survival. - Francis Adirubasamys swimming lessons
- Pis Fathers lessons about wild animals and Pis
own knowledge about animals (flight distance
social behavior territorial behavior
alpha/omega concept circus trainers behavior)
AND
3SurvivalPis Ingenuity (Cleverness)
- The temporary prow he builds at first
- The raft he later builds using oars and life
vests - The solar sills
- The training of Richard Parker
- Discovery that Pi can make Parker seasick and
therefore condition and control him - Learning to fish and catch turtles
4Survival Richard Parker
- Richard Parkers contribution to Pis Survival
- Parker gives Pi the will to live. (Parker cannot
survive without Pi Pi is responsible for
Parkers life) See page 236. - Parker distracts Pi from thinking about his lost
family and his tragedy. - An idle mind tends to sink. Parkers presence
keeps Pis mind alert and active. (Chapter 57)
5SurvivalPis Faith and Will to Live
- When Pi is about to give up, he hears a voice in
his heart. The message is a prayer I will not
die. I refuse it. I will make it through this
nightmare. I will beat the odds, as great as
they are. I have survived so far, miraculously.
Now I will turn miracle into routine. The
amazing will be seen every day. I will put in
all the hard work necessary. Yes, so long as God
is with me, I will not die. Amen (Chapter 53) - Pi prays five times every day and practices the
devotions of all three of his religions,
Hinduism, Christianity, and Islam - The blackness would stir and eventually go away,
and God would remain, a shining point of light in
my heart. I would go on loving, Pi says
(Chapter 74).
6Survival Zoomorphism
- Zoomorphism is a phenomenon when an animal takes
a human or another species as one of its own - Pi identifies potential causes for this
phenomenon - One is need for companionship
- Social well being is another staves off violent
anarchy - Tells of a mouse living with vipers (i.e. snakes)
- A dog serving as surrogate mother for lion cubs
- The rhinos and the goats
- All of this lends credence to his later tale of
life with Richard Parker on the lifeboat
7FREEDOM ZOOS AND RELIGION
- I dont mean to defend zoos. Close them all
down if you want (and let us hope that what
wildlife remains can survive in what is left of
the natural world). I know zoos are no longer in
peoples good graces. Religion faces the same
problem. Certain illusions about freedom plague
them both. (19). - You have known the confined freedom of a zoo
most of your life, now you will know the free
confinement of a jungle (Chapter 94). Part of
Pis imagined farewell speech to Richard Parker. - Consider these two statements. What do they mean?
8Two Approaches to Life
- Science and Religion/Reason and Faith
- Mr. Kumar, Pis Biology Teacher, is an atheist.
He says, There are no grounds for going beyond a
scientific explanation of reality and no sound
reason for believing anything but our sense
experience. A clear intellect, close attention
to detail and a little scientific knowledge will
expose religion as superstitious bosh. God does
not exist (27). Mr. Kumar had polio as a child
and called out to God for help. He does not think
God heard him. Pi says that polio must be an
awful disease if it can kill God in a man.
9Two Approaches to LifeScience and Religion
- The author describes Pis faith and spirituality
as Words of divine consciousness moral
exaltation lasting feelings of elevation,
elation, joy a quickening of the moral sense,
which strikes me as more important than an
intellectual understanding of things an
alignment of the universe along moral lines, not
intellectual ones a realization that the
founding principle of existence is what we call
love, which works itself out sometimes not
clearly, not cleanly, not immediately,
nonetheless ineluctably (63).
10Two Approaches to Life Science and Religion
- Bapu Ghandi said, All religions are true. I
just want to love God (69). Pi gives this
response to the three holy men of the three
different religions that Pi embraces. These men
and Pis parents insist that a person can only
have one religion. Pi disagrees.
11On Religion
- Pi also says, The main battlefield for good is
not the open ground of the public arena but the
small clearing of each heart. Meanwhile, the lot
of widows and homeless children is very hard, and
it is to their defense, not Gods, that the
self-righteous should rush. To me, religion is
about our dignity, not our depravity (71).
12On Religion
- Pis father and mother are not religious people,
and they do not understand Pis religious
practices. His father says, Progress is
unstoppable. It is a drumbeat to which we must
all march. Technology helps and good ideas
spreadthese are two laws of nature. If you
dont let technology help you, if you resist good
ideas, you condemn yourself to dinosaurhood!
(75).
13On Dry, Yeastless Factuality
- When Mr. Okamota and Mr. Chiba do not believe
Pis story, Pi becomes angry with them. Mr.
Okamota tells Pi, We believe what we see. - Mr. Okamota also tells Pi his story contradicts
the laws of nature (i.e. science) - Pi says, If you stumble at mere believability,
what are you living for? Isnt love hard to
believe?
14Dry, Yeastless Factuality
- When they persist in their disbelief, Pi shouts
at them Dont you bully me with your
politeness! Love is hard to believe, ask any
lover. Life is hard to believe, ask any
scientist. God is hard to believe, ask any
believer. What is your problem with hard to
believe? (297)
15Dry, Yeastless Factuality
- Pi also tells Okamota and Chiba, be excessively
reasonable and you risk throwing out the universe
with the bathwater (298). Tigers exist,
lifeboats exist, oceans exist. Because the three
have never come together in your narrow, limited
experience, you refuse to believe that they
might. Yet the plain fact is that the Tsimtsum
brought them together and then sank. (299)
16Dry, Yeastless Factuality
- Pi finally gets frustrated and tells Okamota and
Chiba, I know what you want. You want a story
that wont surprise you. That will confirm what
you already know. That wont make you see higher
or further or differently. You want a flat story.
An immobile story. You want dry, yeastless
factuality (302).
17Pis Second, Factual Story
- Pi finally gives the men what they want, a more
believable story. - When he is finished telling this second story, he
asks them, So tell me, since it makes no factual
difference to you and you cant prove the
question either way, which story do you prefer?
Which is the better story, the story with animals
or the story without animals? - They agree the story with animals is better and
Pi says, And so it goes with God.
18Science and Religion Mutually Exclusive?
- Mr. Okamotas report makes reference to the
tiger, so it appears that Pi converts him to
believing what is hard to believe. - When we study Inherit the Wind, this issue of a
scientific vs. a religious view of life and
knowledge will arise again. - Pi uses both reason and faith in his life. At
least for Pi, the two approaches to life are not
mutually exclusive.